News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date:
July 30, 2010
Contact: SA Wendell Campbell
Public Information Officer
Number: (713) 693-3000
Four
Plead Guilty As A Result Of “Operation
Reload”
Today’s guilty pleas brings
total to 22 convicted
JUL
30 -- (Laredo, Texas) – Four
key targets of Operation Reload pleaded
guilty to drug conspiracy and/or money
laundering conspiracy charges bringing
the total to 22 who now stand convicted
for their involvement in a drug trafficking
organization responsible for transporting
bulk quantities of marijuana and cocaine
from the Laredo area to points north in
the United States and laundering the proceeds,
United States Attorney José Angel
Moreno announced today along with Zoran
Yankovich, Special Agent in Charge of the
Drug Enforcement Administration’s
Houston Division.
The
Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force
(OCDETF) investigation dubbed “Operation
Reload” spearheaded by the Laredo Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the
Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigations
culminated in the return of two sealed indictments
in December 2009 which were unsealed in January
2010 following the arrest of a total of 29
persons. Operation Reload, a long term investigation,
targeted alleged members of drug trafficking
organizations operating in the Laredo area
engaged in distributing bulk quantities of
marihuana and cocaine from the Laredo area
to distribution venues such as Dallas, Houston
and Florida, transporting large sums of money
generated by the sale of the drugs from points
of drug distributions to Laredo and Mexico,
and laundering the proceeds by conducting
financial transactions via Western Union
wire transfers and by utilizing numerous
bank accounts to make cash deposits and withdrawals
of drug proceeds, and financial transactions
to purchase and sell vehicles and real property.
Today,
Omar Compean, 44, the head of a Laredo based
drug transportation cell, and his right hand
man, Javier Hugo Perez, 54, both of Laredo,
Texas, pleaded guilty to drug and money laundering
conspiracy charges before United States District
Judge Micaela Alvarez. Compean and Perez,
who maintained the drug ledgers and coordinated
the transportation of marihuana loads, admitted
they provided transportation for marihuana
loads in excess of 10,000 but less than 30,000
kilograms for the Centeno and Galaviz drug
trafficking organizations and laundered the
drug proceeds through various bank accounts
through financial transactions designed in
whole or in part to conceal and disguise
the nature, location, ownership, control
and source of the proceeds.
As
part of their respective plea agreements,
Compean and Perez have agreed to forfeit
two ranches, two horse trailers, over $200,000
in cash proceeds, and further agreed to forfeit
a total of $16,000,000 to the United States.
The government had previously forfeited twelve
high end vehicles as a result of Operation
Reload including a Mercedes, a Hummer, two
King Ranch Trucks and a Shelby Mustang which
were used to facilitate drug trafficking
or derived from drug proceeds.
Two
other defendants, Jesus Enrique Salazar,
47, a driver and scout for drug loads, and
Omar Compean’s wife, Blanca Compean,
39, both of Laredo, Texas, also pleaded guilty
today. Salazar pleaded guilty the drug conspiracy.
Blanca Compean pleaded guilty to a money
laundering charge and has agreed to forfeit
to the United States any interest in property
identified as having been derived from drug
proceeds.
These
four defendants are scheduled to be sentenced
on Nov. 1, 2010. The 18 who previously pleaded
guilty to drug or money laundering charges
are Oscar Rodriguez Avila, 46, Bernardo Pineda
Lopez, 50, Noel Omar Barrera, 27, Juan Manuel
Lara, 38, and Sergio Arturo Solis, 42, all
of Laredo; Felipe Ruiz, 28, a Mexican National
residing in Rio Bravo, Texas, Eduardo Guadalupe
Martinez, 32, Gloria Guevara, 30, George
Albert Dominguez, 45, Alejandro Alcaraz,
26, Sergio Alberto Ortegon, 32, all of Laredo,
Texas, Albert Salinas, 50, of San Antonio,
Texas, Mario Alberto Reyes-Hernandez,23,
Mario Alberto Reyes Moya, 50, and Jose De
Jesus Romero, 32, of from Nuevo Laredo, Mexico,
Miguel Angel Davalos, 25, and Luis Gerardo
Casarez, 38, both of Laredo, Texas, and Hector
Guadalupe Rojas, 37, of Dallas, Texas.
The
drug trafficking conspiracy conviction carries
a mandatory minimum of 10 years up to a maximum
of life imprisonment. A money laundering
conspiracy conviction carries a maximum punishment
of 20 years imprisonment.
A
total of seven defendants are pending trial.
Leandro Salas-Galaviz, 35, a/k/a “Daniel
Obregon”; Galaviz’s wife, Mayra
Lopez, 30; his mother, Josefina Galaviz,
55, all Mexican nationals, and Galaviz’s
sister, Yesicca Magana, 30, from Keller,
Texas and Norberto Alaniz, 36, of Laredo,
are pending trial Oct. 25, 2010 before Judge
Micaela Alvarez. Two other defendants charged
in a separate indictment arising from Operation
Reload, Justino Loredo Vera, 47, of El Cenizo,
Texas, and Manuel Moreno Gonzalez, 39, of
Nuevo Laredo, Mexico are also pending trial
later this year.
Assistant
United States Attorneys Andy Guardiola and
Mary Lou Castillo are prosecuting the case.
These
defendants are presumed innocent unless and
until convicted through due process of law.
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